Discover great cinema and the connections that made it possible.

Search a film you love, explore by mood or theme, or follow the cinematic threads that connect Hollywood to world cinema.

World Cinema, Connected

Start with a film you love.

Every film you cherish was shaped by the cinema that came before it. Trace the threads.

I.
A Film You Love
The directors, movements, and world cinema that shaped it.
II.
A Theme or Idea
The films and directors who explored it.
III.
A Feeling
How do you want to feel for the next two hours?
LINEAGE OF THE MONTH

The films that built Parasite

Bong Joon-ho's class thriller draws on Hitchcock's architecture of dread and Kurosawa's vertical geography of wealth and poverty. It deepens that with Hirokazu Kore-eda's tender social realism and Lee Chang-dong's slow-burn class resentment, sharpened by the procedural unease of Bong's own crime cinema.

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The films that built The Matrix

The Wachowskis built their digital fight grammar on John Woo's operatic gunplay, Jackie Chan's acrobatic martial-arts kineticism, and the chrome dread of Japanese anime.

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The films that built Moonlight

Barry Jenkins learned to carry meaning through body, color, and silence from Claire Denis and Wong Kar-wai's aching romanticism. He inherits Satyajit Ray's tender humanism and Wim Wenders's lonely, neon-lit landscapes of longing.

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The films that built Django Unchained

Tarantino built his revenge Western from Sergio Corbucci's blood-soaked snowscapes and Sergio Leone's operatic standoffs — the Italian spaghetti tradition turned toward a reckoning with slavery.

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The films that built The Grand Budapest Hotel

Wes Anderson chased Ernst Lubitsch's bittersweet comic touch, Max Ophüls's gliding romantic fatalism, and the Czech New Wave's deadpan grief for a civilization slipping away. Beneath the whimsy run sterner currents: Kurosawa's tragic grandeur and Jacques Becker's patient, exacting craftsmanship.

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The films that built Get Out

Jordan Peele turned politeness into terror through Roman Polanski's paranoid interiors and Michael Haneke's cold indictment of liberal comfort. Beneath it runs the tradition of genre allegory, where horror and science fiction smuggle in their sharpest reckonings with race and power.

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The films that built Oldboy

Park Chan-wook forged his vengeance cinema from Hong Kong action's balletic brutality and Japanese realism's unblinking gaze, turning pulp genre into a reckoning with buried national trauma.

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The films that built The Worst Person in the World

Joachim Trier borrows Jacques Demy's weather-shifting blend of joy and heartbreak, Antonioni's restless modern longing, and Kieślowski's moral attention to small, devastating choices.

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World Cinema · Geographic View
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A geographic atlas of world cinema. Hover any country to see its most celebrated films. Click to enter its cinematic history.
Cinema represented
countries · films
Drawing the world…
16,000 Films · 90 Countries
Directors
Weekly Film Discoveries
Cinema in
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Every week — one verified thread connection, three films you haven't seen yet, and a quote from the director who drew the line. Curated from 1,032 sourced filmmaker citations.
I.
Personalized to Your Exploration
The more you explore Cinema Atlas, the more precisely tailored your recommendations become. Your weekly dispatch reflects the connections you've been exploring.
II.
One Thread Connection Per Week
Each dispatch traces a single influence line — the film that changed a director's language, and why it matters.
III.
International Cinema First
France, Japan, Brazil, Argentina, South Korea, Germany, Spain and beyond. Cinema Atlas prioritizes the world's cinema, subtitled and uncompromised.
IV.
Where to Watch
Every recommendation includes exactly where to stream, rent, or buy the film right now. No dead ends.
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